1 / 40

AP U.S. History Chapter 13

AP U.S. History Chapter 13. The Rise of Mass Democracy 1824-1840. Economic distress & the slavery issue raised the political stakes in the 1820s & 1830s Political conflict New political parties New styles of campaigning. The “Corrupt Bargain” of 1824. Election of 1824: four candidates

holly
Télécharger la présentation

AP U.S. History Chapter 13

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. AP U.S. HistoryChapter 13 The Rise of Mass Democracy 1824-1840

  2. Economic distress & the slavery issue raised the political stakes in the 1820s & 1830s • Political conflict • New political parties • New styles of campaigning

  3. The “Corrupt Bargain” of 1824 • Election of 1824: four candidates • JQA (MA) • Henry Clay (KY) • William Crawford (GA) • Andrew Jackson (TN) • All claimed to be “Republicans” • John C. Calhoun V-P on Adams & Jackson tickets

  4. Jackson won popular vote, but not electoral vote • 12th Amendment: House chooses among top 3 • Clay eliminated, BUT Speaker of the House • Could “throw” election to candidate of choice • Crawford: stroke • Clay hated Jackson • Only candidate left: JQA • No personal relationship to Clay • Both nationalists & advocates of American System • Clay met privately w/ JQA & assured support

  5. 1825: House elected John Quincy Adams President • JQA named Henry Clay Secretary of State…CONTROVERSIAL! • Secretary of State path to Presidency • Jackson FURIOUS!

  6. John Quincy Adams

  7. A Yankee Misfit in the White House • Unpopular, irritable, sarcastic, tactless • One of most successful Secretaries of State, but least successful presidents • Refused to practice patronage (give supporters jobs) • Nationalist (when nation sectionalist, states’ rights) • Urged Congress to construct roads & canals • Renewed Washington’s proposal for a national university (criticized: too much $) • Tried to curb land speculation in the west • Attempted to deal fairly with Indians • Overall: extremely unpopular

  8. Going “Whole Hog” for Jackson in 1828 • Election of 1828 • Political party splits • National Republicans: JQA • Democratic Republicans: Andrew Jackson • Mudslinging election • Victory for Jackson (and sweet revenge)!!!

  9. Andrew Jackson

  10. “Old Hickory” as President • Rugged in appearance & childhood • Carried 2 bullets in body from duels • Orphaned at young age • In TN…judge & member of Congress • Known for violent temper • First President from the West • First to be nominated at formal party convention • Second president without college education

  11. Jackson unique • Frontier aristocrat • Owned many slaves, cultivated broad acres, lived in one of the finest American mansions • Inauguration interesting • Mass amounts of people • “nobodies” intermingled with notables • Damage at White House

  12. The Spoils System

  13. The Spoils System • Rewarding political supporters w/ public office • Aka patronage • AJ defended spoils system & used it • Scandals: men bought jobs through high campaign contributions • Illiterates, incompetents, & crooks given positions of public trust • Did cement loyalty to party

  14. The Tariff of Abominations • Tariffs protected American industry against European competition • BUT drove up prices & invited retaliatory tariffs on American agricultural exports • 1824: Congress increased tariff • South only section hurt • Exported agricultural products unprotected, but manufactured goods they had to buy from north were protected • Also anxious about slavery • Would the federal gov’t try to intervene? • Missouri Compromise, Denmark Vesey’s SC rebellion

  15. Tariff & slavery ? gave South momentum to advocate stronger for states’ rights • SC took lead in protesting “Tariff of Abominations” • Legislature published The South Carolina Exposition • Secretly written by Calhoun • Denounced tariff as unjust & unconstitutional • Proposed nullification of tariff

  16. “Nullies” in South Carolina • South Carolina advocated stronger states’ rights • Took lead in protesting Tariff of Abominations • Tariff unjust & unconstitutional • Struggled to get 2/3 majority in state legislature to nullify • Congress passed Tariff of 1832 • South still unhappy • State elections (1832): enough support to nullify tariff • Also threatened secession if Washington attempted to collect tariff by force

  17. The Nullification Crisis • Jackson would not tolerate defiance • Threatened to invade state & hang nullifiers • Prepared military • Drafted proclamation against nullification • SC responded with counterproclamation • Senator Henry Clay drafted Compromise Bill • tariff would drop 10% over 8 year period • Passed through Congress • Congress also passed Force Bill: President could use military to collect federal tariff duties • SC: special convention • repealed nullification and then nullified Force Bill

  18. The Trail of Tears • AJ’s Democrats committed to westward expansion • Confrontation w/ natives • In past, we could acquire land via formal treaties • Many whites wanted to assimilate Native Americans • Several tribes violently resisted • Others accommodated • Cherokees (GA) • “Five Civilized Tribes”-Cherokees, Creeks, Choctaws, Chickasaws, & Seminoles

  19. Cherokees & assimilation • Abandoned semi-nomadic lifestyle for settled agricultural life and idea of private property • education, gov’t, successful slave holding cotton planters • BUT in 1828 GA declared Cherokee tribal council illegal • Asserted own jurisdiction over Indian affairs & land • Cherokees appealed to Supreme Court • 3x ruled in favor of Cherokees • AJ refused to recognize Court’s decisions • Goal: open land to western settlement • Proposed bodily removal (“rescue”) of tribes beyond Mississippi

  20. Indian Removal Act (1830) • Forced uprooting of 100,000+ Indians • Most from “Five Civilized Tribes” • Many died • Some Sauk & Fox braves from IL & WI resisted eviction, but were crushed by troops • In FL, Seminoles retreated to Everglades • Fought guerilla war • Many ended up in OK

  21. The Trail of Tears & the Indian Removal Act (1830)

  22. The Bank War • Jackson distrusted monopolistic banking & overbig business • Not a fan of the BUS • Minted gold & silver coins, but not paper $ • Prinicipal depository of fed gov’ts funds • Controlled much of nation’s gold & silver • Private institution accountable to its elite circle of moneyed investors • Nicholas Biddle: Bank President (too much power) • Profit #1 priority

  23. Webster & Clay proposed bill to renew Bank’s Charter • Clay = AJ’s rival • If AJ signed bill, he would lose support from West • Bank had foreclosed on many western lands • If AJ vetoed, he would lose wealthy Easterner’s votes • AJ vetoed bill • Declared bank unconstitutional • Even though it was according to McCulloch v Maryland

  24. The Bank War

  25. Election of 1832 • New third party: Anti-Masonic Party • Opposed secret societies • AJ a Mason • National nominating conventions • Republicans & Anti-Masons adopted formal platforms • Clay’s Republicans: $$$ • AJ won popular and electoral votes • Reelected to second term

  26. Burying Biddle’s Bank • BUS set to expire in 1836 • AJ decided to bury bank for good by removing federal deposits from the vaults • Advised against, but did it anyways • Federal gov’t $ ended up in pet banks (chosen b/c pro-Jackson) • Flooded country with paper $ • Authorized Treasury to issue Specie Circular • Required public lands to be purchased with metallic $ • Stopped speculative boom • Contributed to financial crash and panic in 1837

  27. The Birth of the Whigs

  28. AJ’s opponents called him King Andrew I • Too much power • AJ an aristocrat • Whigs • United in hatred for AJ • First emerged as Clay, Webster, & Calhoun tried to censure AJ for Bank War • Attracted other groups alienated by AJ • Support protective tariffs, national bank, and federal internal improvements

  29. Whigs • Called for internal improvements (roads, canals, etc) • Cannot agree on slavery question • Webster= anti, Calhoun= pro, Clay= both? • Federalist belief that educated, landed elites were best suited to run country • In Age of Jackson, this means doom as a party!

  30. The Election of 1836 • Martin Van Buren (Democrat) vs. William Henry Harrison (Whig) • Van Buren Jackson’s Sec. of State • AJ handpicked him to be his successor • Whigs disorganized • Van Buren wins in a near landslide • Inherits policies of Jackson (and problems) • Panic of 1837 as banks collapse • Indian Removal Act of 1830 Trail of Tears

  31. Martin Van Buren

  32. Big Woes for the “Little Magician” • 8th President • Had a lot working against him • Handpicked (many Democrats resented him) • Mild-mannered (complete opposite of AJ) • Almost to war with Britain over Canadian rebellion • Anti-slavery agitators in North • Texas annexation? • Economic panic (thanks to AJ)

  33. Panic of 1837 • Causes • Rampant speculation (“get rich quick” schemes) • Jacksonian finance: Bank War & Species Circular • Failure of wheat crops (prices increased) • Massive foreclosures • Financial problems abroad (Britain called in loans) • Rising interest rates • Banks collapsed, factories closed, unemployment • 30% manufacturing unemployment • Van Buren pushed Divorce Bill • Divorce gov’t from banking altogether & establish independent treasury • Independent Treasury Bill passed Congress (1840)

  34. Panic of 1837 • Independent Treasury little more than a vault to store money • States not receiving funds needed to spur economy • State banks collapse with no funds • Missouri resorts to using fur as currency!

  35. Texas Revolution • We wanted Texas for expansion • From Spanish to Mexican control • 1823: tract of land granted to Stephen Austin for settlement • Goal: settle w/ 300 families • By 1825 30,000 Texan Americans • Most law-abiding, God fearing people • Davy Crockett, Jim Bowie, Sam Houston • Friction b/w Mexicans & Americans • Slavery, immigration, local rights • Austin went to Mexico City to negotiate differences with Santa Anna • Jailed for 8 months • Santa Anna started to raise army

  36. The Lone Star Rebellion • 1836: Texans declared independence • Sam Houston: Commander in Chief • Santa Anna led troops into Texas • Trapped & slaughtered Texans at Alamo • Americans wanted revenge • Houston (outnumbered) defeated & captured Santa Anna at San Jacinto

  37. Texas Revolution

  38. Texas Revolution • Santa Anna forced to sign two treaties • Withdrew Mexican troops • Recognized Rio Grande as southwest boundary of Texas • On day before he left office, AJ recognized the Lone Star Republic • Texas now wants to join Union • What to do about slavery???

  39. Election of 1840 • Martin Van Buren (Democrat) up for reelection • vs. William Henry Harrison (Whig) • War hero • John Tyler (V-P) running mate • Published no official platform • “Tippencanoe and Tyler, too!” • Victory for the Whigs

  40. Two Major Changes in American Politics • Populist democratic style • Politicians expected to appeal to people • Common man was moving to center of political stage • Two-party political system • Jacksonian-Democrats glorified liberty of individual • Clung to states’ rights & federal restraint in social & economic affairs • Whigs trumpeted national harmony of society & the value of community • Tended to favor renewed national bank, protective tariffs, internal improvements, public schools, & moral reforms • Some similarities: mass based, commanded loyalties of all kinds of Americans from all social classes, in all sections

More Related